Abstract
This is the language one engages when climbing the precipitous slope connecting the legacy of the colonial [British and Dutch] “encounter” with the KhoiSan peoples of Southern Africa in the fifteenth century with contemporary popular culture discourse on the First Lady of the United States, Michelle Obama. My chapter posits two arguments, namely that nineteenth-century European scientific racism etched a language that became the cornerstone for representations of Sarah Baartman, which in effect was transferred onto millions of African and African disaporic women’s bodies, culminating in the current display, discussion, and dissection (ala Cuvier) of Michelle Obama. Secondly, I suggest that Michelle Obama has succeeded in disrupting this lens and language through the ownership of her body. The last two years (2008–2010) of international media flurry has solidified the schizophrenic relationship the North has had with black femininity. Placed on the dissection table of the Western gaze, Michelle Obama’s body has been serrated with questions of her human-ness by the simple nature of her black womanhood (Barack Obama’s dissection is not nearly the same as Michelle’s and gender plays a central role in the difference.
Who might be a part of a terrorist cell?
…
Whose fist-knocks may summon the devil from hell?
…
Michelle
Rah! Rah! Smear! Rah! Rah!
“A Smear-Cheer for Michelle Obama” (Trillin 2008, 6)
Ludicrous as the opinion may seem, I do not think an oran-outang husband would be any dishonour to a Hottentot female; for what are those Hottentot. They are, say the most credible writers, a people very stupid and very brutal. In many respects they are more like beast than men; their complexion dark, they are short and thick-set, their noses flat, like those of a Dutch dog; their lips very thick and big their teeth exceedingly white, but long, and ill set, some of them sticking out of their mouth like boars tusks; their hair black, and curled like wool… taking all things together, one of the meanest nations on the face of the earth. (Long 1774, 353)
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© 2011 Natasha Gordon-Chipembere
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Gordon-Chipembere, N. (2011). Under Cuvier’s Microscope: The Dissection of Michelle Obama in the Twenty-First Century. In: Gordon-Chipembere, N. (eds) Representation and Black Womanhood. Palgrave Macmillan, New York. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230339262_11
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230339262_11
Publisher Name: Palgrave Macmillan, New York
Print ISBN: 978-1-349-29798-6
Online ISBN: 978-0-230-33926-2
eBook Packages: Palgrave History CollectionHistory (R0)